Up First from NPR - Daily Pauses in Gaza, Manchin Re-Election Decision, Southern Border Surge
Episode Date: November 10, 2023Israel agrees to daily pauses in fighting to allow for a "humanitarian corridor" in areas of northern Gaza, according to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin will not seek re...-election in West Virginia. And immigration on the US-Mexico border reaches an all-time high. Today's episode of Up First was edited by Mark Katkov, Megan Pratz and Andrea DeLeon. It was produced by Shelby Hawkins and Ben Abrams. We get engineering support from Stacey Abbott. Our technical director is Zac Coleman. Our show director is Milton Guevara, and our executive producer is Erika Aguilar. Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
Transcript
Discussion (0)
How's Iowa?
It's cold, like windy.
You sound so California right now.
Can somebody give A a sweater?
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu says Israel has agreed to daily four-hour humanitarian pauses in northern Gaza.
We want to facilitate a safe passage of civilians away from the zone of fighting.
Palestinians are moving south on foot.
I'm Leila Faldel, that's A. Martinez, and this is Up First from NPR News.
Democrat Joe Manchin announced that he will not run for re-election in the Senate.
Will he consider a presidential run instead?
And immigrants from around the world are arriving at the U.S.-Mexico border.
In Russia, it's so difficult.
I can't describe it. It's so difficult for me.
Catastrophe. Officials say they've encountered nearly two and a half million people within a year-long period, which marks an all-time high. So what's driving the surge? Stay with us. We've
got all the news you need to start your day.
Now Our Change will honor 100 years of the Royal Canadian Air Force and their dedicated service to communities at home and abroad.
From the skies to Our Change, this $2 commemorative circulation coin marks their storied past and promising future.
Find the limited edition Royal Canadian Air Force $2 coin today.
Tens of thousands of Palestinians are fleeing Gaza City on foot.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told Fox News yesterday that Israel is granting civilians a route to escape each day from northern Gaza.
The fighting continues against the Hamas terrorists,
but in specific locations for a given period of a few hours,
we want to facilitate the safe passage of civilians away from the zone of fighting, and we're doing that.
This morning, Gaza's health ministry says Israel struck Gaza's main hospital.
Israel says the Hamas command center is located beneath the
hospital, a claim that the militant group denies. With us now, we're joined by NPR's Daniel Estrin
in Tel Aviv. Daniel, tell us about how people are trying to get out of Gaza City.
Yeah, Israel has been doing this every day since Sunday. They've announced a few hours for people
to flee from northern Gaza. This is the main population center in Gaza City.
The road that they are fleeing on is so torn up that it's hard to drive on,
and so people are fleeing on foot.
This began in smaller numbers earlier this week,
but it's ramped up just in the last couple of days.
More than 100,000 people are estimated to have fled so far,
and our producer Anas Baba watched the masses walking in the sun.
I can hear an intensive clashes while the people are evacuating.
They're just like holding white flags between their hands.
Every one of them is telling me the same thing.
My arms is killing me because I was raising them in the air for the past one hour.
She couldn't find her 10-year-old daughter, Dana Abouzanada.
She was missing.
And other scenes of just pandemonium as people were walking along this route,
others saying they were walking past Israeli tanks on both sides of the road and walking past dead bodies strewn in the road.
Elderly people saying they were panting from exhaustion, people were thirsty,
and people saying they didn't know where they were going next. But they were describing
the conditions that they were fleeing in North Gaza. No water, no food, no internet,
and just a worsening humanitarian situation there.
So what's Israel's plan on the ground there in Gaza?
Well, right now we are hearing reports of Israeli tanks closing in on Shifa Hospital,
the main hospital in Gaza, where, as you mentioned earlier, Gaza health officials are saying that
there were several strikes today in the hospital grounds on a maternity ward, they say. Israel's
army has not commented yet on that. But there are debates in Israel
whether this main hospital in Gaza can become a legitimate military target, whether if Hamas
operates from there or beneath there, it becomes a legitimate target. There are many, many thousands
of people sheltering in that hospital. Now, in terms of Israel's plans, I attended a briefing
with Benny Gantz, a minister on Israel's war cabinet. He said Israel doesn't know how long this campaign will be or who will rule Gaza after the war,
but he says Israel must maintain security superiority there.
What about people in Israel? What's the mood there? How are they feeling?
Well, besides the intense anxiety with the rocket fire, although somewhat lessened now,
continuing, Israeli cities and towns are arming themselves. They say that's the lesson of the October 7th attacks. They're forming security squads. The U.S. is sending weapons
for those squads. And human rights groups in Israel are warning about a trend of crackdowns,
Israeli police crackdowns on anti-war protests. There were some Arab community leaders planning
a demonstration who were detained and released. That's NPR's Daniel Estrin in Tel Aviv. Daniel,
thank you. You're welcome.
Democrats in West Virginia are waking up to a new reality. And Republicans there are seeing an opportunity to pick up a Senate seat that's long been out of reach. After months of deliberation
and long conversation with my family, I believe in my
heart of hearts that I have accomplished what I set out to do for West Virginia. That's Democrat
Joe Manchin announcing in a video news release that he will not run for re-election. Here to
tell us more is NPR's Dave Mistich, who joins us now from Morgantown, West Virginia. Dave,
Manchin's a moderate from a red state. He holds a lot of power because Democrats hold a very slim majority of the Senate. So how does he wield that influence?
That's right. Well, he sometimes really irked his own party and changed the dynamics of key
legislation and votes. Going all the way back to the Trump era, Manchin was the only Democrat who
voted to confirm Justice Brett Kavanaugh to the Supreme Court. And Manchin has also been rather
pivotal in influencing legislation pushed by the Biden administration, notably the Inflation Reduction Act and a
bipartisan bill on infrastructure. He also managed to slip a provision into the debt ceiling bill
that expedited a long-stalled pipeline that runs through West Virginia and into Virginia,
much to the dismay of many of his Democratic colleagues in Congress. State Senator Mike Caputo, one of the few Democrats holding a seat in the State House,
had this to say about Manchin. The most powerful Joe in Washington is not Joe Biden,
it's Joe Manchin, because he really held the big stick in the Senate and was able to maneuver and
I hate to use the word play, but able to work the system as well as anybody.
So now that he's putting that stick down in the Senate, I mean, what does this do to the balance of power there?
Well, quite frankly, it gives a big advantage to Republicans seeking to flip that seat.
It's one that's been seen as pivotal as to who will control the Senate following next year's elections.
And it's a big loss for Democrats here in West Virginia.
Republicans took over the statehouse in Charleston in 2014
for the first time in more than eight decades.
Manchin is the only Democrat representing the state in Congress.
And then you have former President Donald Trump,
who dominated here in the 2016 and 2020 presidential elections.
Democrats here, they tell me that they don't feel like Manchin calculated a loss
if he ran again, but, you know, they tell me that they don't feel like Manchin calculated a loss if he ran again.
But, you know, they say they see it as him feeling like this was just time to walk away from the Senate.
Realistically, though, if he was in this race, Manchin would have been in for a tough fight for sure.
And, you know, there's two strong Republican candidates already in the race.
Republican Governor Jim Justice, who has been endorsed by former President Trump, and Alex Mooney, who currently holds a seat in Congress.
All right, so now that he dropped this on West Virginia, he dropped this on the Senate,
what's he going to do next?
Well, Manchin says he will travel the country to gauge interest in a movement to, quote,
mobilize the middle. He's been featured at events sponsored by the group No Labels,
which has been focused on a third-party ticket, drawing questions about whether or not he is considering a run for president himself. No Labels sent me
over a statement last night that said that the Senate is losing a great leader in Manchin,
but they said they're still gathering input on what they call a unity ticket,
and they say they won't announce their plans until 2024. And if President Biden is concerned
at all about how a third-party run might affect his own plans for re-election, he isn't really showing it when it
comes to Manchin. The president put out a statement last night thanking the senator for some key wins
for his administration. Yeah, they've known each other a long time. That's NPR's Dave Mistich.
Dave, thanks a lot. You're welcome. Crossings along the nation's southern border are at an all-time high. Officials report more than
2.4 million apprehensions in a year-long period ending in September. Meanwhile, the Biden
administration is moving ahead with plans to add some 20 miles to the border wall in Texas,
and it has resumed deportation flights to Venezuela.
NPR's Jasmine Gartz joins us now from the California-Mexico border. Jasmine,
why are migrants crossing? Why is that number going up?
Well, I think something that gets lost in this conversation is the number of displaced people around the world has never been this high. That's according to the UN. And you can really see that
at the border. I spent time in Tijuana this week.
I talked to people in line who had applied online and gotten appointments with Customs and Border Protection.
And one man I spoke to, his name was Pyotr.
He's a Russian medical specialist.
And he was traveling with his wife and two teenage boys.
They left because there's a war. Russia, it's so difficult.
I can't describe it. It's so difficult for me. Catastrophe. He kept repeating that word,
catastrophe, catastrophe. He asked that his last name be withheld because he still has family back
home and he's scared for them.
All right. So he and his family applied online. They got this interview with Customs and Border
Protection to enter the U.S. with permission, which is a part of what President Biden's
immigration policy is about. But does that mean that that policy is working?
Yes and no. The policy is twofold. On the one hand, punish most people who cross the border
without papers. On the other, expand legal
pathways, which is what Piotr was doing. But the wait to get these interviews for legal entry can
be very long, and many people who are fleeing terrifying situations, they get desperate.
Another person I met in line was Rosy Alejandra. She was a medical student in Venezuela. She says
government harassment has
gotten unbearable there. Her hope is to eventually get to Florida, where she has family.
So she fled Venezuela and she lived in shelters in Mexico for months while she waited for her
appointment. And during that time,
she says she considered just crossing the border without papers. But she knew people who tried that and they got deported. And she says being deported back to Venezuela for her, that would mean putting
her life at risk. So she just decided it wasn't worth it. Wow. You know, we've been hearing from
officials in New York and other cities like that
who say those shelters are full. They can't take any more migrants, not one more. The people you
spoke to in Tijuana, are they aware of these kind of realities in American cities? Oh, absolutely.
Over and over, I heard concerns like, will I be able to get shelter? Will there be xenophobia?
Will I be allowed to work? But everyone I spoke to said that at the end of the day, it can't be worse than where they're coming from.
And, you know, on the topic of jobs, something that I keep meeting migrants like Rossi or Piotr,
who were in fields like medicine where there are shortages in the U.S.,
and I think this is going to be a major issue in the upcoming election, immigration and labor shortages.
Jasmine Gartz is NPR's immigration correspondent.
She joined us from San Diego, California.
Jasmine, thanks for bringing us this.
Thank you.
And that's Up First for Friday, November 10th.
I'm Amy Martinez.
And I'm Leila Faldil.
Today's episode of Up First was edited by Mark Katkov, Megan Pratt, and Andrea DeLeon.
It was produced by Shelby Hawkins and Ben Abrams,
and we get engineering support from Stacey Abbott.
Our technical director is Zach Coleman.
Our show director is Milton Guevara, and our executive producer is Erica Aguilar.
Start your day here with us tomorrow.
And I know you know this, but I'm going to say it anyway.
Every single morning, we give you the news you need to start your day. So
when you want to go deeper, zooming in on just one story, listen to Consider This. In the Consider
This feed right now, far from the war in Gaza, Palestinian farmers in the occupied West Bank
are finding their lives upended. Listen to Consider This wherever you get your podcasts.